Bet on health-care stocks ahead of earnings, trader advises – CNBC

Health-care stocks have been on a tear, and with Johnson & Johnson and United Health Group reporting earnings on Tuesday, Todd Gordon of TradingAnalysis.com sees the sector rising even higher.

The health-care-tracking ETF (XLV) is already up more than 16 percent year to date, and from a technical standpoint, the XLV is forming a "pattern" that leads Gordon to believe the ETF could hit an all-time high as soon as next month.

On a chart of XLV, Gordon points out that the ETF has been making a continuous "uptrend" parallel channel, and there is still room to run on the upside.

"You can see that the market is more or less in the middle of this uptrending channel," the trader said Monday on CNBC's "Trading Nation." "[This] means with some strong earnings, we could continue to push up towards that upper end of that channel, right around the $83 region."

To play for that bounce to all-time highs, Gordon wants to buy the August monthly 79-strike call and sell the August monthly 82-strike calls, expiring August 18. Since Gordon is paying $1.48 total for the trade, or $148 per options contract, he would lose that amount if XLV were to close below $79 on the expiration date.

But if XLV were to close above $82 on August 18, then Gordon would make $152 on the trade.

Johnson & Johnson and United Health are two of the biggest holdings in XLV. Johnson & Johnson is currently up 14 percent year to date while UnitedHealth has also surged over 16 percent this year.

Originally posted here:

Bet on health-care stocks ahead of earnings, trader advises - CNBC

America’s Biggest Publicly Funded, Fully Integrated Health-Care System Is Under Attack – The Nation.

Musician First Class Ernie Encinas talks with a patient at the Carl T. Hayden VA Hospital in Phoenix, Arizona, after a concert given by the US Navy Band Southwest the Destroyers. (Gary Ward / Wikimedia Commons)

In the Bay Area, public meetings critical of conservatives are not hard to find. But when about 200 San Francisco military veterans jammed into an auditorium in their citys Veterans War Memorial Building in mid-April, they added diversity to the local resistance. Those in attendancerepresentatives of veterans-service organizations, patients of the Veterans Health Administration, health-policy experts, and local Congresswoman Nancy Pelosiwere trying to educate veterans and the public about proposals that could destroy a single-payer plan for 9 million Americans whose past military service, in combat and noncombat jobs, makes them eligible for VHA coverage.

The threatfaced by VHA users and staff (one-third of whom are veterans themselves)is privatization. The Trump administration has no trouble boosting an already swollen Pentagon budget. But it favors only a modest increase in VHA funding, most of which would be spent on steering veterans care toward non-VHA doctors and hospitals and to for-profit companies for services like audiology and optometry. As part of their ever-expanding outsourcing strategy, Trumps Republican alliesand even some Democratshave demonized VHA employees and attacked their workplace rights and union protections. Meanwhile, according to a number of VHA clinicians I have recently spoken with, VHA leadership is making it difficult for facilities to hire needed staff. An in-house electronic medical-records system thats one of the best in the country is slated to be replaced by one produced by a private vendor. More importantly, Congress is considering legislation that could pave the way for agency dismantling.

Such steps will dramatically increase costs to the US taxpayerand strike a collateral blow against efforts by labor and the left to defend federally funded medical coverage in any form, whether through the Affordable Care Act (ACA), Medicaid, or Medicare.

The current VHA privatization push first gained traction in 2014, when staff whistle-blowing drew public attention to appointment delays at some overwhelmed VHA facilities, like the Phoenix VA Health Care System. Serious problems existed at the Phoenix VA and other VHA medical centers, where administrators, since fired or disciplined, were caught gaming performance measures that mandated that veterans be seen within 14 days of requesting an appointment (a performance standard many criticize as unrealistic and unattainable). A subsequent inspector generals report identified patterns of obstacles to care in the Phoenix VA Health Care System, including a faulty appointment-making system and limited access to psychotherapy and mental-health services. The inspector generals report found that 40 VHA patients had died while on treatment wait listsa number that was widely reported in the mainstream mediabut the report went on to say that only six of those deceased patients had experienced clinically significant delays, and concluded that it could not conclusively assert that the absence of timely quality care caused the deaths of these [six] veterans.

The Concerned Veterans for America (CVA), a Koch brothersfinanced Astroturf group that provides no services and has few actual members, quickly exploited this situation and helped foster a wave of highly misleading reporting about the VHA. Although average wait times at the VHA are comparable to wait times in the private sector (a recent estimate reported average wait times of 24 days), the CVA and its allies continue to argue that the VHA is broken beyond repair. Coverage in mainstream media, like The New York Times, reflects this narrative consistently, describing the VA as beleaguered, a stumbling bureaucracy, or a troubled health system.

Like the British National Health Service, the VHA not only pays for but also provides services to veterans.

Republicans seized on the trumped-up scandals, despite having blocked the effort of Senator Bernie Sanders, then chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, to provide the needed level of funding and support the VHA earlier in the year. In response to the Phoenix scandal, Congress passed the hastily and ill-crafted Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014, brokered by Sanders and Arizona Senator John McCain. Through the Choice program, vets faced with appointment delays of more than 30 days or more than 40 miles of travel to the nearest VHA facility could use private health-care providers instead.

The Choice program, which was originally scheduled to sunset in August, has already been extended until Choice money runs out. Now Republicans are seeking a wholesale expansion of the outside-the-VHA option, creating a gold mine for the health-care industry. At the San Francisco forum, speakers opposed to such privatization, like Michael Blecker, a Vietnam War veteran and leader of Swords to Plowshares, warned of its budgetary impact on successful VHA programs to reduce veteran homelessness in the Bay Area. House minority leader Pelosi argued that the Republican goal is not improving the quality of veterans care or reducing the cost of it. The people who want to privatize the VA dont want to make it better, she said. They want to make a buck.

Thats a lesson that Vietnam War vet Bob Rowen learned the hard way when his wife, suffering from terminal brain tumor, ran up largedoctor and hospital bills. His family almost went bankrupt over her medical expenses, Rowen reported at the San Francisco meeting. In contrast, his own coverage is fully paid, without copays or premiums. His salaried VHA caregivers can coordinate treatment, in cost-effective fashion, for his multiple conditions, which include heart trouble, high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), an area of unrivaled VHA expertise.

How will veterans with serious mental and physical conditions be able to navigate the maze that is private-sector health care? Rowenasked. My wife and I couldnt. We simply could not overcome the obstacles the system placed in our way.

As the San Francisco speak-out demonstrated, grassroots organizing against VHA privatization is growing among veterans, their advocacy groups, and the American Federation of Government Employees union (which has more than 100,000 VA dues payers). But many progressives currently fighting ACA repeal or Medicaid cuts are only dimly aware of the parallel threats to the VHA. Some health-care reformers erroneously assume that veterans can easily fend off these attacks because of the lobbying clout and patriotic cachet derived from their membership in veterans-service organizations like the American Legion or Disabled American Veterans, which oppose privatization. Others, in left and liberal circles, have been adversely influenced by negative coverage of the VHA.

When it comes to fighting to save Americas only single-payer system, even dedicated single-payer activists arent giving the issue much thought, says VHA physician and Medicare for all advocate Jason Kelley. Most health-care activists dont know much about the VHA, and have no idea about the high-quality of care it delivers. Their views on whats going on in the Canadian or European health-care systems are very up-to-date but, when it comes to the VA, they are closer to the publics outdated attitudes.

As Kelley points out, the VHA is the nations largest publicly funded, fully integrated health-care system. And the VHA is not just an insurerreimbursing private providers like Canada or our federal government does, in more limited fashion, to provide Medicare for seniors. Like the British National Health Service, the VHA not only pays for but also provides services to veterans. It is, as Kelley suggests, a workable model for those fighting for single-payer health care in the United States, which should be promoted more effectively. The agency employs 300,000 people (a third are veterans) many of them functioning like direct-care providers in the UKs national health service.

These VHA employees dont serve all US veterans. Congressionally mandated eligibility requirements limit VHA access to about nine out of Americas 21 million veterans. To qualify, you must be either low-income or have service-connected disabilities. (As a result, VHAs patient population is generally older, sicker, and poorer than in the private sector. There is, currently, no effort to expand benefits to veterans who are healthier and more affluent. In fact, current efforts to channel more veterans into private-sector care may lead to further restrictions in eligibility, cuts in services, or increased out-of-pocket payments.)

Because of the totality of veterans physical, mental, and economic problems, the VHA endeavors to be a leader in health equity, as the American Journal of Public Health has reported. Unlike its private-sector counterparts, the VHA operates extensive programs to reduce homelessness and help veterans find employment and adjust to civilian life when they leave active duty. The VHA also anchors a national system of Veterans Treatment Courts, helping veterans faced with minor criminal charges avoid jail time if they accept counseling help.

The VHA model of integrated care stands in stark contrast to the fragmented, episodic nature of much patient care elsewhere.

The VHA has developed what is, arguably, the only functional mental and behavioral health-care system in the United States. The veterans served by it have far more mental-health problemsincluding PTSD, depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and other conditionsthan the average private-sector patient. The VHA is one of the only health-care systems in the country that has integrated mental-health care into all of its primary-care settings. When patients raise a mental-health issue, their primary-care physician doesnt just provide a specialist referral and leave it to them to follow up. A primary-care doctor can walk a patient down the hall and personally introduce them to a psychologist or psychiatric nurse practitioner at the same clinic location. Vietnam War veteran Denny Riley, for example, went to his primary-care physician in Martinez, California, to talk about the fact that he was having trouble sleeping. She then immediately introduced me to a psychologist, he said. In the course of being treated for my sleep problems, I showed the psychologist a poem Id written about tinnitus and she immediately sent me to a hearing specialist for hearing aides to help with that.

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Veterans who need help understanding how to take their medications or who have trouble adjusting their diet or obtaining housing get the same kind of warm hand-off to a pharmacist, dietician, or social worker who are part of primary-care teams. Care is also coordinated between, for example, a specialist in hearing lossa widespread veteran problemand a neurologist familiar with Agent Orangerelated Parkinsons disease, or a pulmonologist who can diagnose the respiratory damage done by exposure to military-base burn pits in Iraq or Afghanistan.

Myriadstudies have found that treatment of veterans with diabetes, heart disease, and mental-health problems like PTSD is superior to private-sector care precisely because this VHA model of team-based integrated care stands in stark contrast to the fragmented, episodic nature of much patient care elsewhere. One RAND study on mental-health care documented that 70 percent of VHA mental-health providers understand military culture, while only 8 percent in the private sector had any familiarity with the kinds of specific military-related issues that effect veterans. A recent study on cancer care published in the Annals of Internal Medicine reported that older male veterans received care in the VHA that was often better than that in the private sector, because the VHA is much better coordinated than in most other settings.

The VHA is also able to deliver such high-quality care because its doctors, nurses, and other clinicians are salaried. They have no financial incentive to over-treat their patients, as so many private-sector physicians paid on a fee-for-service model do. Instead, the VHA encourages whats known as right careavoiding unnecessary tests, medications, and procedures that are sometimes harmful themselves, responsible for many patient injuries, and claim one-tenth of all US health-care spending.

Despite an aging US population, many private hospitals and health-care networks still have insufficient services for elderly patients. VHA hospitals are, in contrast, recognized leaders in the provision of geriatric and palliative and hospice care. As Dr. Diane Meier, a specialist in those fields, notes, The VA was first out of the box on geriatrics, starting fellowship programs throughout the country when few other hospital systems had them, and is a leader in delivering appropriate end-of-life care. The VHA trains a huge share of American physicians; 70 percent do their residency at the VHA. VHA clinicians also conduct research of great benefit to the broader US patient population; among their singular achievements are the shingles vaccine, the first implantable cardiac pacemaker, and the nicotine patch.

All of this and much more is in jeopardy. At a June 7 meeting of the Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs, VA Secretary David Shulkin unveiled a plan to outsource more VA services to the private sector and defended White House budget priorities. Shulkin is a medical doctor and former VHA undersecretary for health under President Obama; he is the only Trump cabinet pick both qualified for his position and publicly supportive of his agencys mission. Now, in meetings at the White House, he must placate Trumps son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who leads the administrations Office of American Innovation, which includes VHA overhaul in its portfolio. In addition, Trump has saddled Shulkin with advisers like Darin S. Selnick, a former staffer for the Koch-funded CVA and leading conservative advocate of VHA privatization. Trump has also met with private-sector hospital CEOs who stand to gain from the outsourcing of VHA care to their institutions.

On Capitol Hill in June, Senator Jon Tester (D-MT) questioned the fact that 33 percent of the budget increase sought by Shulkin would be diverted to private-sector treatment, adding only 1.2 percent to support directly delivered care. It doesnt take very many budgets like that andwere privatizing the VA, Tester warned. In its longer-range forecast, Fighting for Veterans Healthcare, a San Franciscobased VA advocacy group, predicts that, as budgets are shrunk to pay for outsourced care, more salaried caregivers, specialized programs, and clinics would be eliminated, and the VA will become a shell of itself. In early July, the chair of the Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs, Johnny Isakson (R-GA),went even further, introducing adraft of a bill that would pave the way for the total privatization of the VA health-care system.

Those on the left who oppose the Trump agenda and want to erode his working-class supportwhere it existshave a golden opportunity in the fight to save the VHA. They can help promote the closest thing to a European-style national health service the United States has ever produceda working example of single-payer financing that has broad popular support among the millions of patients covered. Without additional allies and public broader understanding of whats at stake, national veterans organizations, plus affected VHA unions, could easily lose this crucial anti-privatization fight, making it even harder for health-care reformers to win Medicare for all.

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America's Biggest Publicly Funded, Fully Integrated Health-Care System Is Under Attack - The Nation.

Break-in, ‘threatening note’ at office of GOP senator considered swing vote in health-care bill – Washington Post

A threatening note was found over the weekendafter a break-in at the Las Vegas office of Sen. Dean Heller (Nev.), a Republican senator who could be a critical swing vote on the GOP health-care bill, police said.

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said officers responded to a call about a burglary alarm Saturday morning atHellers office in southwest Las Vegas. There, they discovered what they described in a statement as a threatening note addressed to Heller near the door to his office.

TheNevada Independents Jon Ralston reportedthat the note was related to the Senates upcoming vote on the GOPs health-care bill:

A note taped to Sen. Dean Hellers campaign office was from someone asserting that he would lose his health care if the key senator voted for the repeal bill and that he would die if that happened and would take Heller with him, a law enforcement source said.

Police said Monday that they would not disclose the content of the note, citing an ongoing investigation.Megan Taylor, a spokeswoman for Heller, confirmed the break-in but said thatshe could not comment because of the investigation.

Heller has been under tremendous pressure from both the left and the right on his vote on the health-care bill. Republican lawmakers have been steadfast for years in their promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obamas signature measure a pledge President Trump frequently invoked on the campaign trail.

However, as The Posts David Weigel pointed out, Heller is the only Senate Republican facing reelection in 2018 in a state won by Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton last year. His unique position has made him the focus of several advertising campaignstrying to lobby for his vote.

Last month, Heller came out against an earlier iteration of the GOPshealth-care bill, becoming the fifth Republican senator to do so at the time. At a June 23 news conference, Heller said he was particularly concerned about potential cuts to Medicaid, as well as the impending loss of insurance for those struggling with mental-health and substance-abuse issues.

Im telling you right now, I cannot support a piece of legislation that takes away insurance from tens of millions of Americans and hundreds of thousands of Nevadans, Heller said then.

Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) announced on June 23 that he would not support the Republican Senate health-care bill. (Reuters)

Three weeks later, Heller is in no less aprecarious spot when it comes to voting on the GOPs new proposal to remake the Affordable Care Act, unveiled by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) last week.

Currently two Republican senators Susan Collins (Maine) and Rand Paul (Ky.) have publicly said they continue to oppose the GOPs health-care bill. Just one more no vote from a Republican senator would mean the bill would not have the 50 votes it needs to pass.

When Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) announced that he needed to recover from surgery and would be absent from a vote Saturday night, McConnell said the Senate would postpone the vote.

The incident at Hellers office follows similar incidents involving other GOP senators in recent weeks. Over the July Fourth recess, a protester was arrested outside the Tucson office of Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) after asking a staffer: You know how liberals are going to solve the Republican problem? They are going to get better aim. And an Omaha man was arrested this month after walking into an Iowa motorcycle shop and saying that he could kill Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), who was scheduled to visit the shop the next day.

[Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval still doesnt support the Senate health-care bill. Thats big trouble for Republicans.]

The break-in also came just three days after the Federal Election Commission ruled that House and Senate lawmakers may now use campaign funds to pay for security upgrades at their personal homes a change from previous rulings that required lawmakers to petition the panel on a case-by-case basis. But after warnings from House and Senate security officials in the wake of the shooting of House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.), the FEC said that security upgrades now qualify as ordinary and necessary expenses lawmakers incur as part of official duties.

Security upgrades at congressional district offices are handled with taxpayer funding and Congress is preparing to spend tens of millions more dollars to protect lawmakers and their staffs. All 435 House lawmakers are receiving$25,000 in emergency funding added to their annual office allowances to be used for any security purpose a nearly $10.9 million expense that can be used to addbulletproof windows at district offices or to hire a private security guard for public events back home. And at least $5 million is earmarked for the House Sergeant at Arms to pay for security upgrades at House district offices that face threats or are considered vulnerable.

The Senate, which has fewer district offices to protect, has not yet allotted such money. Responsibility for securing Senate district offices, which are usually found in federal buildings or courthouses, depends on the location. If it shares space with a federal agency that also has a law enforcement responsibility, that agency likely provides protection. If the office is in a courthouse, U.S. Marshals likely provide security. But if the office is in a private building, a senators staff has likely made arrangements with local police or the buildings private security officers to keep an eye on the location.

This post has been updated.

Washington reacts to competing Senate health plans. (Lee Powell,Rhonda Colvin,Victoria Walker,Monica Akhtar/The Washington Post)

Read more:

In an arid, lonely stretch out west, the health coverage that bloomed is now at risk

GOP opponents to Senate health-care bill see vote delay as an advantage

Why would the GOP want to pass a hugely unpopular health-care bill? Lets debate.

See more here:

Break-in, 'threatening note' at office of GOP senator considered swing vote in health-care bill - Washington Post

"I could die in the street": For cancer survivor, health care debate gets personal – CBS News

President Donald Trump has often said he doesn't want people "dying in the streets" for lack of health care.

But in the United States, where chronic conditions are the major diseases, people decline slowly. Preventive care and routine screening can make a big difference for those at risk for things such as heart problems and cancer, especially over time.

That edge is what doctors and patients fear will be compromised if Republican efforts to repeal the Obama-era health law lead to more uninsured people. The uninsured tend to postpone care until problems break through.

It's a message that lawmakers are hearing from doctors' groups and constituents, in letters and emails, and at town hall meetings.

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The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projected Monday that the Senate GOP bill would leave 22 million more Americans without insurance in...

About 10 years ago, Cathy Cooper of Ocala, Florida, was battling a blood cancer. Against the doctor's advice, she continued to work full time as a paralegal, through chemotherapy and radiation, just to preserve her health insurance. Cooper said she would schedule chemo on Fridays, spend the weekend sick from side effects and report back to work Monday.

Now in her early 30s, Cooper is healthy. She has her own business as a photographer specializing in maternity, newborns, families and seniors, and a family of her own. Her health insurance is through HealthCare.gov. With her cancer history, Cooper is worried about changes under debate that may reduce options for people with medical conditions. She said she voted for Hillary Clinton in the presidential election.

"The 'dying in the streets' thing -- it's an over-time process," said Cooper. "If I didn't have insurance, it (cancer) could just keep forming inside me and I wouldn't know. Then I'd go into the hospital, and there's nothing they could do. And then, yeah, I could die in the street. But that's because I wouldn't have had insurance to get things checked out prior to that point."

In Charlotte, North Carolina, Dr. Octavia Cannon said that's basically what happened to one of her patients several years ago. The patient, a working mother with three young children and more than one job, was uninsured after losing previous Medicaid coverage. She went to Cannon, an osteopathic ob-gyn, because of abnormal bleeding. Cannon said she knew something was horribly wrong on the basis of her initial physical examination. The pathology lab confirmed advanced cervical cancer.

"In six months, she was dead," Cannon recalled. "All I could think was 'Who is going to take care of these babies?' If she had only come in for a Pap smear."

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Senator John McCain underwent emergency surgery on Friday to remove a blood clot from above his eye. This has forced Republican leaders to call o...

Such stories are swirling around the Senate debate as Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., pushes toward a vote on legislation rolling back much of former President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act. The GOP bill has been facing headwinds since the Congressional Budget Office estimated it would lead to 22 million more uninsured people by 2026.

Administration officials say the nonpartisan budget office has been wrong before about health coverage, and its analytical methods may give too much weight to the current requirement that most people carry health insurance or risk fines. (Republicans would repeal that immediately.) Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price said Trump's goal is more people with health insurance, not fewer.

There's not much debate about the negative consequences of being uninsured.

Studies by the National Academies have found that the uninsured are more likely to receive too little care, and too late; be sicker and die sooner; and receive poorer care in the hospital.

But surprisingly, there are questions about whether gaining coverage produces tangible health benefits.

Major government surveys have documented clear improvements to family finances associated with Obama's coverage expansion. On health itself, the evidence is mixed.

Medicaid expansions in New York, Maine and Arizona in the early 2000s were associated with a 6 percent decline in death rates in those states, compared with neighboring states that did not expand coverage for low-income people. A study of Massachusetts found a similar trend.

But in Oregon a Medicaid expansion study that found a marked reduction in depression failed to detect significant improvement in blood sugars, blood pressure and cholesterol levels -- risk factors for heart disease and diabetes.

Dr. Cyrus Hamidi, a solo family medicine practitioner in Sparks, Maryland, said having insurance is a start, reducing barriers to access for patients.

"If you have to pay to go to the doctor, then you worry about payment instead of what you need to do to reduce the risk of dropping dead," he said.

Gaywin Day, a union electrician from Austin, Texas, said being able to get coverage under Obama's law in the aftermath of a medical crisis has been "a lifesaver."

Day, in his early 60s, was between jobs and uninsured when he had a stroke in March. A couple of months later, a "special enrollment period" enabled him to get subsidized coverage through HealthCare.gov, opening doors to physical therapy and follow-up medical care.

Now, Day no longer uses a walker or cane. He's thinking about returning to work.

"Nobody wants anybody dying in the streets, but if I hadn't got this ... I could just be shriveling up in my bed," he said.

He didn't cast a ballot last year. "I don't vote," said Day. "I do a lot of praying."

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"I could die in the street": For cancer survivor, health care debate gets personal - CBS News

Fixing health care the right way – The Boston Globe

Health professionals rallied at the State House in February.

Massachusetts has consistently been a national leader in improving health care access and working to address high health care costs. We were the first state in the nation to provide near universal insurance coverage through health care reform legislation passed in 2006 and continue to pursue solutions to help drive costs down, such as those contained in legislation passed in 2012. These steps are a testament to the fact that, as a Commonwealth, we are willing to think creatively and boldly to achieve a health care system that works for all our residents.

But there is a great deal of uncertainty and instability in health care due to changes being considered at the federal level that would result in higher costs for seniors and children with disabilities, a loss of federal revenue for the state, and a reduction in payments for health care providers. Its unclear how such changes will impact the states ability to deliver on its goal of universal access to quality, affordable health care. Without regard to whats happening in Washington, Massachusetts needs to continue to innovate and create a sustainable health care system for both our residents and our economy. Health care costs currently strain not only the states budget, but also those of our businesses and families.

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Two weeks ago, Governor Baker put forward a significant package of changes to the states MassHealth program, the broader health insurance market, and certain care delivery systems. The governor requested that the six legislators negotiating the Fiscal Year 2018 budget adopt this entire package just as negotiations were wrapping up, and mere days before the new fiscal year began. The governors proposals represent some creative thinking; however, in order to accomplish meaningful health care reform, all stakeholders need to be at the table and the most diverse set of options should be considered. A broader conversation ensures that short term fixes are not overvalued at the expense of the long term sustainability of our health care system. We believe this broader conversation must address the drivers of health care costs, not just change eligibility benefit levels and move people from one program to another.

The Senate recognizes the need to address these fundamental challenges and believes that passing comprehensive health care cost containment this legislative session is important. For the last year, the Senate has been engaged in extensive preparation to undertake this work. A group of senators, with the help of the Milbank Memorial Fund, has been conducting ongoing research with other states to learn best practices on how to address significant cost drivers. Additionally, pursuant to legislation that was passed last year, the Legislature engaged with various stakeholders to produce recommendations on how to address certain provider pricing issues in the Commonwealth that contribute to inefficiencies in our health care system.

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The Senate even took a first step to implement some of those recommendations through the inclusion of out-of-network billing reform in its budget. The Senate has also remained focused on managing MassHealth costs by including a provision in the final Fiscal Year 2018 budget sent to the governors desk that requires the Massachusetts Health Connector to explore how it could create a premium sharing program for small businesses with MassHealth eligible employees.

The proposals that the governor introduced at the tail end of the budget process are an important part of this ongoing conversation. While welcome, those contributions should be part of a broader dialogue that engages the full spectrum of stakeholders in a robust discussion that moves along relatively quickly but thoughtfully. Massachusetts health care sector is one of our five largest industries, supporting the financial, physical, and mental well-being of communities across the Commonwealth. This sector is faced with complex issues that require thoughtful and meaningful solutions. We look forward to working with the governor, the House, the public, members of the health care sector, and all other stakeholders to engage in an open and productive exchange of ideas to develop meaningful reform legislation this session.

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Fixing health care the right way - The Boston Globe

5 things for Monday, July 17, 2017: Health care bill, Russia, Venezuela, Iran – CNN

1. Health care bill This was supposed to be a do-or-die week for the GOP Senate's health care bill, but instead, it's officially in limbo land. Why? Well, Sen. John McCain had surgery to remove a blood clot, which means he's going to be out for a little while. And since the GOP only has a two-seat majority AND since Rand Paul and Susan Collins both say they won't vote for the bill in its current vote, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell just doesn't have the votes to move this thing forward. So he's postponing a vote until McCain recovers. There also won't be a CBO score coming out today on the bill. 2. Russia investigation The revelations just keep coming out of Donald Trump Jr.'s meeting at Trump Tower with a Russian lawyer who promised dirt on Hillary Clinton. We've now learned there were eight people there. They include a Russian-American lobbyist and two others who are yet to be identified. President Trump's lawyer went on all the Sunday talk shows saying that nothing questionable could have happened at the meeting because the Secret Service, which had started protecting Trump because he was the GOP nominee by then, had allowed the people in. But the Secret Service shot that idea down, noting that Trump Jr. wasn't under its protection, so it wouldn't have vetted the meeting's participants. 3. Venezuela referendum Millions of Venezuelans have voiced their opinion on PresidentNicolas Maduro's plan to rewrite the country's constitution -- but their opinions won't count. More than seven million people voted in a non-binding referendum organized by the country's main opposition parties. The overwhelming majority (about 98%) of them voted against the plan. But Maduro's government called the referendum illegal and is still holding a vote on July 30 to pick a special assembly to rewrite the country's constitution. It's just the latest chapter in the social unrest that's rocked this country for months. 4. Iran An American citizen has been given a lengthy prison sentence in Iran.Xiyue Wang, a grad student at Princeton, was sentenced to 10 years for spying. He was arrested there last summer while doing research, the school said. It's not clear when his trial was held. Wang's sentence comes just as the Trump administration is expected to re-certify that Iran is living up to the demands of the nuclear deal it made under the Obama administration. Trump had promised to rip up the deal during the 2016 campaign. 5. Arizona flooding deaths An absolutely heartbreaking tragedy occurred over the weekend in Arizona. Several members of a family were swept away and killed during a sudden flash flood. Nine people died and one is missing after members of the family, enjoying a day at a swimming hole north of Phoenix, got caught up in flash flooding caused by heavy rains. Most of the victims were just children, ranging in ages from 2 to 13. BREAKFAST BROWSE

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5 things for Monday, July 17, 2017: Health care bill, Russia, Venezuela, Iran - CNN

Study: US healthcare system is worst among 11 developed nations – The Hill

The U.S. healthcare system isranked the worst among 11 developed nations, according to a new study.

The Commonwealth Fund measuredelementsincluding care, access, administrative efficiency, equity and healthcare outcomes in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdomand the United States.

Nearly half of low-income Americans, 44 percent, were foundto have trouble getting access to healthcare coverage, while just 26 percent of high-income Americans were found to have issues getting coverage.

The study comes as the GOP struggles to repeal and replace ObamaCare.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnellMitch McConnellGroups launch 'people's filibuster' against GOP health bill Note threatened Heller's life over healthcare vote Trump to press GOP senators on healthcare at White House MORE (R-Ky.) announced this past weekend that the Senate would delay its consideration of the healthcare bill while Sen. John McCainJohn McCainGroups launch 'people's filibuster' against GOP health bill Note threatened Heller's life over healthcare vote Trump to press GOP senators on healthcare at White House MORE (R-Ariz.) recovers from surgery.

Two GOP senators Rand PaulRand PaulTrump to press GOP senators on healthcare at White House GOP senator: McConnell Medicaid comments a 'breach of trust' Poll: Americans see healthcare as most important issue MORE (R-Ky.) and Susan CollinsSusan CollinsTrump to press GOP senators on healthcare at White House GOP senator: McConnell Medicaid comments a 'breach of trust' Poll: Americans see healthcare as most important issue MORE (R-Maine) have already spoken out against the revised Senate GOPlegislation.

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Study: US healthcare system is worst among 11 developed nations - The Hill

Health Care Bill: Insurance Groups Call Parts "Unworkable …

(WASHINGTON) Two of the insurance industry's most powerful organizations say a crucial provision in the Senate Republican health care bill allowing the sale of bare-bones policies is "unworkable in any form," delivering a blow to party leaders' efforts to win support for their legislation.

The language was crafted by conservative Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and leaders have included it in the overall bill in hopes of winning votes from other congressional conservatives. But moderates have worried it will cause people with serious illnesses to lose coverage, and some conservatives say it doesn't go far enough.

Two of the 52 GOP senators have already said they will oppose the legislation. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell cannot lose any others for the legislation to survive a showdown vote expected next week.

The overall measure represents the Senate GOP's attempt to deliver on the party's promise to repeal President Barack Obama's health care law, which they've been pledging to do since its 2010 enactment.

The criticism of Cruz's provision was lodged in a rare joint statement by America's Health Care Plans and the BlueCross BlueShield Association. The two groups released it late Friday in the form of a letter to McConnell, R-Ky.

"It is simply unworkable in any form," the letter said. They said it would "undermine protections for those with pre-existing medical conditions," increase premiums and lead many to lose coverage.

The provision would let insurers sell low-cost policies with skimpy coverage, as long as they also sell policies that meet a stringent list of services they're required to provide under Obama's law, like mental health counseling and prescription drugs.

Cruz says the proposal would drive down premiums and give people the option of buying the coverage they feel they need.

Critics say the measure would encourage healthy people to buy the skimpy, low-cost plans, leaving sicker consumers who need more comprehensive coverage confronting unaffordable costs. The insurers' statement backs up that assertion, lending credence to wary senators' worries and complicating McConnell's task of winning them over.

The two groups say premiums would "skyrocket" for people with preexisting conditions, especially for middle-income families who don't qualify for the bill's tax credit. They also say the plan would leave consumers with fewer insurance options, so "millions of more individuals will become uninsured."

The bill provides $70 billion for states to use to help contain rising costs for people with serious conditions. But the insurance groups' statement says that amount "is insufficient and additional funding will not make the provision workable for consumers or taxpayers."

The Cruz provision language in the bill is not final. McConnell and other Republicans are considering ways to revise it in hopes of winning broader support.

McConnell and top Trump administration officials plan to spend the next few days cajoling senators and home-state governors in an effort to nail down support for the bill.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office is expected to release its analysis of McConnell's revised bill early next week, including an assessment of Cruz's plan.

The office estimated that McConnell's initial bill would have caused 22 million additional people to be uninsured.

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Health Care Bill: Insurance Groups Call Parts "Unworkable ...

McCain’s Surgery Will Delay Senate Votes on Health Care Bill – New York Times

The announcements, first by Mr. McCain, then by Mr. McConnell, dealt another setback to the effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which once seemed inevitable after years of promises by congressional Republican leaders that they would dismantle it.

With control of the White House and both houses of Congress, Republican leaders foresaw a quick strike coming as soon as January or February. But the House struggled to pass its version of the bill, and the Senate has had even more troubles. Mr. McConnell had to postpone the first votes before the July 4 recess when it was clear he did not have enough support for a procedural motion to take up the bill.

A revised measure unveiled last week was supposed to win over more Republicans, but it was greeted quickly with two Republican defections: Senators Susan Collins of Maine, a moderate, and Rand Paul of Kentucky, a conservative. Both have said they oppose the bill in its current form, for very different reasons, and will not vote even to begin debate.

That left Mr. McConnell without a vote to spare. Mr. McCains ailment cost him the final vote at least for now.

Mr. McCains absence will give the forces of opposition which include scores of health care provider organizations and patient advocacy groups more time to mobilize.

On Friday, in a joint letter, the insurance industry lobby and the association that represents Blue Cross Blue Shield plans came out strongly against one of the innovations in the latest draft. They joined consumer groups, patient advocates and organizations representing doctors, hospitals, drug abuse treatment centers and religious leaders who have expressed opposition to the bill.

With Mr. McCain missing, Senate Republicans would have only 49 potential votes to move ahead with the legislation because all Senate Democrats and the two independent senators oppose it.

Mr. McCain, 80, announced Saturday night that he had the surgery at Mayo Clinic Hospital in Phoenix. He is at home with his family and, on the advice of his doctors, will be recovering in Arizona this week, a spokeswoman said.

Mr. McConnell said that while John is recovering, the Senate will continue our work on legislative items and nominations.

But congressional aides, lobbyists and state officials said Saturday night that Senate leaders should rethink their strategy after being forced to postpone consideration of the repeal bill, which opinion polls show to be highly unpopular.

The House passed a repeal bill, broadly similar to the Senate measure, by a vote of 217 to 213 in early May. Mr. McConnell has had a more difficult time rounding up support in the Senate.

Mr. McCain has been decidedly noncommittal in his comments on the bill. Asked last month about the chances for a quick agreement among Republican senators on a bill, he said that pigs could fly.

A number of other Republicans have expressed serious reservations about the bill in its current form. They include Senators Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Dean Heller of Nevada, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Rob Portman of Ohio.

Governors from both parties have sharply criticized the Senate bill, drafted mainly by Mr. McConnell. Trump administration officials are frantically trying to win over state officials gathered in Providence, R.I., this weekend for a meeting of the National Governors Association.

The administration is trying to discredit estimates by the Congressional Budget Office that more than 20 million people would lose insurance coverage by 2026 as a result of the Senate and House bills.

When Senate Republican leaders unveiled a revised version of their health care bill on Thursday, Mr. McCain said it did not include the measures he had been seeking to protect the people of Arizona and newly eligible Medicaid beneficiaries, in particular.

Tens of thousands of people in Arizona have gained coverage through the expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, and Mr. McCain was planning to propose amendments to the bill to protect his constituents.

In all, 20 Republican senators come from states that have expanded Medicaid.

Mr. McCain also criticized the unusual process by which the bill was developed: in the majority leaders office, without the benefit of public hearings or the expertise of Senate committees.

Have no doubt, Mr. McCain said in a statement. Congress must replace Obamacare, which has hit Arizonans with some of the highest premium increases in the nation and left 14 of Arizonas 15 counties with only one provider option on the exchanges this year.

But if we are not able to reach a consensus, he continued, the Senate should return to regular order, hold hearings and receive input from senators of both parties, and produce a bill that finally provides Americans with access to affordable and quality health care.

A version of this article appears in print on July 16, 2017, on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: McCain Out, Senate Puts Off Health Care Votes.

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McCain's Surgery Will Delay Senate Votes on Health Care Bill - New York Times

Focus on Russia or health care, Dems divided on message – ABC News

House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley hesitated when asked about his party's core message to voters.

"That message is being worked on," the New York congressman said in an interview this past week. "We're doing everything we can to simplify it, but at the same time provide the meat behind it as well. So that's coming together now."

The admission from the No. 4 House Democrat that his party lacks a clear, core message even amid Republican disarray highlights the Democrats' dilemma eight months after President Donald Trump and the GOP dominated last fall's elections, in part, because Democrats lacked a consistent message.

The soul-searching comes as Democrats look to flip at least 24 GOP-held seats necessary for a House majority and cut into Republican advantages in U.S. statehouses in the 2018 midterm elections. Yet with a Russia scandal engulfing the White House, a historically unpopular health-care plan wrenching Capitol Hill and no major GOP legislative achievement, Democrats are still struggling to tell voters what their party stands for.

Some want to rally behind calls to impeach the Republican president as new evidence indicates possible collusion between Trump's campaign and the Russian government. Democratic leaders are reluctant to pursue that approach as it only energizes the GOP base. Others want Democrats to focus on the GOP's plans to strip health insurance from millions of Americans. And still others say those arguments can be fashioned into a simplified brand.

"The Democratic Party needs to up its game," national Party Chairman Tom Perez said in a speech this week. "What I hear most from people is, 'Tom, we not only need to organize, but we need to articulate clearly what we stand for.'"

For now, at least, Democrats are waging a tug-of-war largely between the Russia investigation and the GOP's attempts to gut the 2010 Affordable Care Act.

Several liberal groups that had been laser-focused on health care have intensified calls for impeachment in recent weeks, including MoveOn.org, Indivisible and Ultraviolet.

"We need to be talking about impeachment constantly," said Scott Dworkin, co-founder of the recently formed Democratic Coalition Against Trump. He warned on Twitter, "If you're an elected Dem & you're not talking impeachment or 25th amendment then find a new party."

Yet one of the left's favorites, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, is focusing almost exclusively on health care.

Sanders, an independent who caucuses with Senate Democrats, said in an interview that "there should not be a rush to judgment" after emails released by Donald Trump's son this week revealed that Trump's top advisers held a meeting with a lawyer they were told represented the Russian government.

Sanders sidestepped questions about impeachment, warning instead that "many, many thousands of Americans" will die every year if the GOP health care plan becomes law. Sanders has hosted swing state rallies focused on health care in West Virginia, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Ohio in recent weeks and was in Iowa on Saturday.

Democratic operative Zac Petkanas, who led Hillary Clinton's campaign war room, agrees that this week's developments in the Russia investigation shouldn't change the party's focus heading into 2018.

"Candidates need to be saying the word 'health care' five times for every time they say the word 'Russia,'" Petkanas said. He added, "I think it's a fundamental mistake to make this election a referendum on impeachment."

It's not that easy for some elected officials, like Rep. Joe Kennedy III, D-Mass., who says concerns about Russia have caught up to health care as a priority among his constituents. He described the Russian developments as "a threat to our foundation of democracy" that demands attention.

"Congress has to be able to walk and chew gum. We have to be able to do both," Kennedy said.

Democrats are naturally playing defense given generations of victories that expanded the role of government, from the social safety net of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal to Lyndon Johnson's landmark civil rights legislation to Obama's health care law.

But many Democrats outside Washington insist they must go beyond opposing Trump and his policies if they expect to make major gains in 2018 and beyond.

"Democrats would make a mistake if we thought pounding Trump and not having an authentic message of our own is a winning strategy," said Ohio Democratic Party Chairman David Pepper. "The message of Democrats has to be about issues that matter to people at their kitchen table."

In South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg said Democrats don't have to retreat from their opposition to Trump, including talking about Russia, but they must tie it all together with a consistent theme that goes beyond day-to-day news cycles.

"It's very simple," he said. "We exist to help people go about their lives, to protect their rights and freedoms and opportunities."

Jason Crow, a Democrat running for Congress in a Colorado swing district, said voters regularly ask him about the Russia story, which "goes to the core of our institutions and our faith in government." But he's anchoring his pitch on issues that "are real and immediate to people's lives: going to college, paying the bills, financing a house, whether they can go and get the health care they need right now in an affordable and accessible way."

Meanwhile, Crowley said voters may have to wait a few more months before they hear national Democrats' new message.

"We're all working on that," Crowley said. "We're hoping to have this up and running and out by this fall."

Barrow reported from Atlanta.

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Focus on Russia or health care, Dems divided on message - ABC News

McConnell defers vote on Senate health-care bill as McCain recovers from surgery – Washington Post

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) put off plans late Saturday to vote on a bill to overhaul the nations health-care system this week, after Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) announced he would be at home recovering from surgery, leaving Republicans short of the votes they needed to advance the legislation.

McCain underwent surgery in Phoenixon Friday to remove a blood clot from above his left eye. On the advice of his doctors, Senator McCain will be recovering in Arizona next week, said McCain spokeswoman Julie Tarallo. A statement from the Mayo Clinic Hospital in Phoenix said the senator is resting at home in good condition and that the surgery went very well.

[Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval still doesnt support the Senate health-care bill. Thats big trouble for Republicans.]

In a statement Saturday night, McConnell said that while John is recovering, the Senate will continue our work on legislative items and nominations, and will defer consideration of the Better Care Act,

Unless at least one of two Republican senators dropped their opposition to moving ahead on the bill, or a vote was postponed until McCain returned, the billwould not havehad the support to proceed.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell unveiled a revised GOP health-care proposal on July 13 but two other Republican senators released a competing plan. Here's how it all breaks down. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)

Two Republican senators Rand Paul (Ky.) and Susan Collins (Maine) have said they will notvote yes to even proceed to the bill. Along with all 48 senators in the Democratic Caucus and without McCain their oppositionwould be enough to block the bill from proceeding to debate. There are 52 Republican senators.

Paul spokesman Sergio Gor said he still planned to vote against proceeding to the bill. A Collins spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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McConnell defers vote on Senate health-care bill as McCain recovers from surgery - Washington Post

Governors skeptical after ‘pretty atrocious’ session with top Trump health officials – CNN

Vice President Mike Pence, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma made a frantic bid at the National Governors Association meeting Friday and Saturday to win over -- or at least silence -- skeptical GOP governors.

But their efforts left major questions unanswered, Republican and Democratic governors said.

And Pence's speech Friday resulted in the vice president openly feuding with Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican who didn't attend the governors' meeting.

Price and Verma had been dispatched to the meeting in Rhode Island to convince governors that their states could absorb the elimination of enhanced Medicaid funding for low-income adults who received coverage under the Affordable Care Act and the reduction of federal support for their overall Medicaid programs.

They urged governors to ignore Congressional Budget Office estimates that 15 million fewer people would be covered by Medicaid by 2026 and that $772 billion would be cut from the program, compared to current law, under a Senate Republican bill that would eliminate Obamacare's expansion of the program.

Their argument: States would gain flexibility to overhaul their traditional Medicaid programs through block grants or per-enrollee caps, allowing them to save money that could be used to stave off losses of coverage.

But the closed-door session with Price and Verma on Saturday was "pretty atrocious," said Connecticut Democratic Gov. Dan Malloy.

"They repeatedly pretended that the federal government saving hundreds of billions of dollars won't translate to actual cuts," he said. "I was told that I'll innovate sufficiently to save them hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars."

Republicans also emerged from the meeting saying they remain concerned about the long-term financial fallout of the bill.

"I think there's disagreement on the outcomes and what that means and whether that is manageable," said Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican whose state expanded Medicaid.

"It is a huge challenge for us in terms of communicating what the future is going to be like to our health care providers," Hutchinson told CNN after the meeting. "That is the challenge for governors -- we're on the front lines here. ... It's the long term that people want to know about."

Another key governor, Nevada Republican Brian Sandoval, told reporters afterward that he remained concerned about the bill's elimination of funding for Obamacare's Medicaid expansion, which led 210,000 Nevadans to gain coverage. Nevada Republican Sen. Dean Heller has closely linked his vote to Sandoval's position.

Malloy said he argued with Price and Verma when -- after Verma had taken issue with the Congressional Budget Office forecasts of coverage losses -- Price cited the CBO analysis to back up a separate point.

"They were incredibly inconsistent between themselves," he said. "They support what they like from CBO, and they attack CBO. But at least the secretary was forced to admit that's the only public generated analysis."

Just before Price and Verma spoke Saturday morning, the consulting firm Avalere Health delivered a presentation that forecast cuts in federal Medicaid funding to the states of 27% to 36% by 2036 under the Senate legislation when compared to current law.

Some governors said that presentation left them less certain about the Trump administration's claims that Medicaid funding would not decline.

"I think there's still some confusion on numbers," said Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead, a Republican. "And so, frankly, I wish we would have had more time this morning to ask questions. There's still a lot of questions from Republicans and Democrats."

Mead said there is a clear divide among GOP governors based on whether their states expanded Medicaid. Mead's state did not. But he said he's still struggling with a "state of flux" on Capitol Hill over health care.

At the center of the case Pence, Price and Verma made to governors was increased flexibility to make changes to their states' Medicaid programs. Under the bills, states could opt to receive a lump sum of money -- known as a block grant -- to cover certain Medicaid recipients. They would receive more control over their programs in exchange.

The bill's critics, however, say that cash-strapped states won't be able to make up for the losses in federal funding even with the additional flexibility. States would be forced to cut enrollment, benefits or provider rates, they argue.

The Trump administration has pledged to aggressively grant states' requests for waivers that would allow them to deviate from traditional Medicaid, and the House and Senate health care bills would give federal officials even further authority to grant those waivers, giving states additional freedom to craft their own programs using federal dollars.

That, Republican governors said, is good news. Hutchinson said Price and Verma gave governors "a number of new ideas that had not been considered before."

Pence's speech Friday drew a tepid reception from Republicans and Democrats in attendance.

He made a reference to Kasich, saying, "I suspect that he's very troubled to know that in Ohio alone, nearly 60,000 disabled citizens are stuck on waiting lists, leaving them without the care they need for months or even years."

That claim, though, is bogus, Kasich's office said. The waiting lists are related to Medicaid's home and community-based services and had nothing to do with Ohio's decision to expand Medicaid under Obamacare.

"The claim is not accurate. It's been fact checked twice," Kasich's communications department said on Twitter, linking to fact-checks from The Los Angeles Times and the Columbus Dispatch.

At the same time Price and Verma were attempting to win over governors, the White House was circulating a new op-ed in The Washington Post in which Trump aides Marc Short and Brian Blase argued that Americans and lawmakers should give "little weight" to CBO projections that millions would lose coverage under the Senate GOP bill.

"The CBO's methodology, which favors mandates over choice and competition, is fundamentally flawed," the two argued. "As a result, its past predictions regarding health-care legislation have not borne much resemblance to reality. Its prediction about the Senate bill is unlikely to fare much better."

CNN's Tami Luhby contributed to this report.

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Governors skeptical after 'pretty atrocious' session with top Trump health officials - CNN

VP Mike Pence on healthcare: ‘We’re on the verge of a historic accomplishment’ – ABC News

Vice President Mike Pence spent his one year anniversary since being announced as President Trumps running mate working to drum up support for their 2016 campaign promise to repeal and replace Obamacare.

This week at the bipartisan National Governors Association meeting in Providence, Rhode Island, Pence was met by skepticism from state leaders concerned about proposed cuts to Medicaid expansion.

On Saturday night, while speaking to a crowd of cheering young conservatives at the Maverick PAC conference in Washington, Pence said hes confident the Senate will be able to move forward on the health care bill.

We're on the verge of a historic accomplishment here in our nations capital, said Pence. Because in the coming days, President Trump, working with the Congress that you helped elect, is going to keep our promise to the American people, and we are going to repeal and replace Obamacare.

Just two days ago, building on the good work of the House of Representatives, Senate leadership unveiled a new version of the Senate health care bill, said Pence. The Senate health care bill is the right bill at the right time to begin to repeal and replace Obamacare, and to rescue the American people from this disastrous policy.

Republicans are struggling to find consensus and enough support to hit 50 yea votes on the bill, despite Trump taking to Twitter on Friday to pressure Republican senators currently on the fence, and Pences pitches in closed door meetings with governors and in a his speech tonight.

The task of whipping up support for the bill during the crucial week before voting seems to have largely rested on Pences shoulders this week, as Trump traveled to Paris and Bedminster, New Jersey. The vice president told supporters tonight to ignore what theyre hearing on cable television, saying hes certain Republican senators will come together in support of the legislation.

President Trump and I are confident, that when the time comes as early as next week, that Republicans and Senators are going to come together and they're going to move this bill forward and we will see the beginning of the end of the nightmare of Obamacare, he said.

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VP Mike Pence on healthcare: 'We're on the verge of a historic accomplishment' - ABC News

Paul: More conservatives will ‘discover’ GOP healthcare bill does not repeal ObamaCare – The Hill

Sen. Rand PaulRand PaulPaul: More conservatives will 'discover' GOP bill does not repeal ObamaCare Paul: I don't think McConnell has votes to pass healthcare bill now New Medicaid worry emerges for centrists MORE (R-Ky.) said Sunday he thinks more conservative Republicans will realize the GOP Senate's healthcare bill does not repeal ObamaCare the longer theproposal is out there.

During an interview on CBS's "Face The Nation," Paul was askedabout Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnellMitch McConnellPaul: More conservatives will 'discover' GOP bill does not repeal ObamaCare GOP holdout: Cruz amendment not the solution on healthcare Paul: I don't think McConnell has votes to pass healthcare bill now MORE's announcement that consideration of the healthcare legislation would be delayed whileSen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) recovers from surgery.

"How will that change the way this goes forward?" host John Dickerson asked Paul, a vocal critic of the Senate GOP's proposal.

"And the more that everybody's going to discover that it keeps the fundamental flaw of ObamaCare."

Paul said the Senate GOP's bill keeps the insurance mandates that "cause the prices to rise, which chase young, healthy people out of the marketplace."

"And leads to what people call adverse selection, where you have a sicker and sicker insurance pool and the premiums keep rising through the roof," Paul said.

"And one of the amazing things to me is, for all the complaints of Republicans about ObamaCare, we keep that fundamental flaw."

The rest is here:

Paul: More conservatives will 'discover' GOP healthcare bill does not repeal ObamaCare - The Hill

Reihan Salam Of ‘National Review’ On The GOP’s Options For Health Care – NPR

Reihan Salam Of 'National Review' On The GOP's Options For Health Care
NPR
Email. July 16, 20178:03 AM ET. Heard on Weekend Edition Sunday. Senate Republicans still can't agree on their health care plan. NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro talks to Reihan Salam, executive editor of National Review, about the Republican Party's options.

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Reihan Salam Of 'National Review' On The GOP's Options For Health Care - NPR

White House pre-buts CBO healthcare score: ‘Little more than fake news’ – The Hill

Two White House aides are preemptively casting doubt on the accuracy of the Congressional Budget Office's assessment of Senate Republicans' healthcare plan, claiming the estimate will be "little more than fake news."

In an op-ed published in The Washington Post, White House legislative affairs director Marc Short and Brian Blase, a special assistant to the president for healthcare policy at the National Economic Council, urged Americans to give "little weight" to the CBO analysis, known as a score.

"The reason: The CBOs methodology, which favors mandates over choice and competition, is fundamentally flawed," they wrote. "As a result, its past predictions regarding health-care legislation have not borne much resemblance to reality. Its prediction about the Senate bill is unlikely to fare much better."

Short and Blase argue that the CBO's assessment of the Affordable Care Act in 2009 was far from accurate.

The independent scorekeeper predicted that 23 million people would enroll in the ACA's exchange plans. But in reality, they wrote, only 10 million people have enrolled in such plans.

But what the CBO failed to predict, Short and Blase wrote, were rising premiums and an overalldecline in insurance choice.

The preemptive effort by the White House to dismiss the CBO analysiscomes as the independent scorekeeper works on its latest estimate for Senate Republicans' healthcare plan.

The office's assessment of the Senate's original healthcare bill estimated that the plan would insure 22 million fewer people over the next decade than under ObamaCare.

Senate Republican leaders are hoping to hold a final vote on the measure next week. But some GOP members have voiced concern over the plan and two have already said they will not vote for it.

Republicans hold 52 seats in the Senate and need at least 50 votes to pass the bill, meaning that if any more GOP senators defect, the bill is certain to fail. Democrats are unanimously opposed to the bill.

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White House pre-buts CBO healthcare score: 'Little more than fake news' - The Hill

Pence touts GOP health care bill to skeptical governors – CNN

Pence is essentially President Donald Trump's envoy to a skeptical group of governors -- including Republicans Brian Sandoval of Nevada and Charlie Baker of Massachusetts -- who are against the Senate bill, citing its damage to the Medicaid expansion included in the Affordable Care Act.

"I understand and appreciate, as the President does, the concerns that many of you have as we talk about Medicaid in the future going forward. Our administration's paid very close attention to this issue," Pence told about 30 governors gathered Friday for the National Governors Association's summer meeting in Rhode Island.

"Let me be clear: President Trump and I believe the Senate health care bill strengthens and secures Medicaid for the neediest in our society, and this bill puts this vital American program on a path to long-term sustainability," he said, without noting that the bill also cuts Medicaid spending from current projections.

"Our administration wants you to innovate," Pence said. "Now is the time to usher in a new era of state-based innovation."

The vice president touted the Republican health care bill's option to block grant Medicaid to the states, and increased funding for combating opioid abuse in the revamped Senate bill.

Pence launched into the topic of health care with a broad -- and tepidly received -- attack on Obamacare.

"President Donald Trump is going to lead this Congress to rescue the American people from the collapsing policies of Obamacare," Pence said.

"As a former governor myself, I know just how important health care is to each and every one of you as you lead your state," he said. "The simple truth, though, is that Obamacare is imploding all across America, and working families and small businesses are paying the price every day."

Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, the NGA chairman, got in a dig at Pence while introducing the vice president, noting that he had expanded Medicaid while governor of Indiana.

Pence did so through a version of the program that includes conservative tweaks designed by now-Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma, who has been working with senators in support of the GOP bill.

"He showed true backbone in Indiana when he expanded Medicaid for his citizens," McAuliffe said.

It was a clear shot at the Trump administration's health care push: Federal funding for that Medicaid expansion would be eliminated if Trump and Pence are successful.

Pence thanked McAuliffe for "that warm introduction."

Then he seized on that jab, noting that he and Verma crafted a plan locally but ran into bureaucratic roadblocks getting former President Barack Obama's administration to sign off on a waiver for the program.

He said governors wouldn't encounter such obstacles with the Trump administration, promising governors more flexibility to implement their own visions.

"And we're going to fight to make that a reality in Washington, D.C. President Trump is dedicated to getting the federal government out of your way," Pence said.

Pence's most important sales job was aimed at one person: Nevada Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval.

Dean Heller, the state's Republican senator, has closely tied his vote on health care to Sandoval's stance. And Sandoval has been sharply critical of the bill, warning that it would knock 210,000 Nevadans off of Medicaid.

Pence met individually on Friday with Sandoval and four other Republican governors, including Arizona's Doug Ducey, Tennessee's Bill Haslam, Wisconsin's Scott Walker and Arkansas' Asa Hutchinson.

HHS Secretary Tom Price and Verma were on hand for the meetings, which came after his afternoon speech.

A source familiar with the Sandoval discussion described it as a "good discussion" and "productive," though it's not clear Pence swayed Sandoval.

On Thursday night, Sandoval sounded unwilling to back any GOP effort that would withdraw funding for Obamacare's Medicaid expansion.

"I'm greatly concerned and very protective of the expansion population," Sandoval told CNN. "They are living healthier and happier lives as a result of their receiving coverage, and for them to lose that at this point would be very hurtful for them. And it's about people -- this is about people. And 210,000 people in my state."

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Pence touts GOP health care bill to skeptical governors - CNN

Our Turn: Protecting patients must be the first goal of health care legislation – Concord Monitor

The New Hampshire Hospital Association, New Hampshire Medical Society and AARP New Hampshire have joined in opposition to the Better Care Reconciliation Act currently under consideration in the U.S. Senate.

Our three organizations oppose the BCRA because it would erode health protections for millions of Americans and expose them to increased costs and health risks. We believe that any health care legislation should have the goal of protecting patients first.

We are concerned that the BCRA would reduce funding for Medicare by cutting nearly $59 billion over 10 years from the Hospital Insurance trust fund, which would hasten Medicares insolvency and diminish the programs ability to pay for services in the future. This would affect hospitals, doctors and consumers by reducing revenue and making it more difficult to provide services to Medicare patients. To put a sharper point on the issue, New Hampshire hospitals are projected to receive approximately $1.5 billion less in Medicare reimbursements over the next decade, reductions that were enacted as part of the Affordable Care Act to help pay for the coverage expansions that have occurred. To maintain those spending reductions while millions of people lose health insurance coverage is simply not feasible.

The BCRA threatens protection for people with employer-sponsored health coverage by weakening consumer protections that ban insurance companies from capping how much they will cover annually or over a persons lifetime leaving people vulnerable to costs that could be financially catastrophic for them.

In addition, the bill cuts more than $700 billion from Medicaid by creating a capped financing structure in the Medicaid program. This could lead to cuts in provider payments, program eligibility, covered services or all three, ultimately harming some of our nations most vulnerable citizens and dramatically impacting providers ability to serve patients and communities who depend on them every day. It has been estimated that this would result in over $1.4 billion in reduced federal spending on Medicaid in New Hampshire over the next decade. Where would New Hampshire turn to find the resources necessary to care for our most vulnerable citizens?

According to the CBO, the BCRA will leave 22 million more people uninsured, including more than 118,000 Granite State residents who were able to secure vital health coverage through the Affordable Care Act, making it more difficult for our most vulnerable to receive the services they need to stay in their homes. Without health coverage for, and therefore access to, critical health services, patients will seek care in emergency rooms, ultimately raising uncompensated care costs for hospitals throughout New Hampshire and increasing cost-shifting to New Hampshire businesses.

We believe that the Better Care Reconciliation Act needs to be viewed through the eyes of patients and the caregivers who take care of them, and should make protecting health care coverage for our most vulnerable citizens a higher priority. We remain opposed to the BCRA and urge the Senate to start over and create a new version of legislation that protects coverage for those who have it and provides coverage for those who need it most.

We appreciate the efforts of both of our senators to protect access to affordable health care for all Granite Staters, and we urge them to continue to work toward bipartisan solutions that will cover more people, not less, and reduce health care costs, including insurance premiums and the high cost of prescription drugs.

(Todd C. Fahey is state director of AARP New Hampshire. Stephen Ahnen is President of the New Hampshire Hospital Association. James Potter is executive vice president of the New Hampshire Medical Society.)

Originally posted here:

Our Turn: Protecting patients must be the first goal of health care legislation - Concord Monitor

How Bad Is US Health Care? Among High-Income Nations, It’s the Worst, Study says – Newsweek

As Republicans struggle to agree on a replacement forthe Affordable Care Act, the Commonwealth Fund has rated the U.S.health care system as the worst among the 11 developed nations it analyzed as part of an evaluation conducted every three years. The think tank also rated the U.S. health care system as the worst-performing of the nations analyzed when the last evaluation was released in 2014.

Related: John McCain says Senate health care bill is going to fail

The Commonwealth Fund focused on care process, access, administrative efficiency, equity and health care outcomes, studying 72 indicators within those fields. The 11 countries analyzed were Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdomand the United States. In addition to rankinglast or close to last inaccess, administrative efficiency, equity and health care outcomes, the U.S. was found to spend the most money on health care.

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The U.S. rated especially poor in equality of coverage. The report found that 44 percent of low-income Americans have trouble gaining access tocoveragecompared with 26 percent of high-income Americans. The numbers forthe U.K. are 7 percent and 4 percent, respectively. Not unrelated, the U.K.s National Health Servicewas deemed the best health care system, just as it was in 2014.In contrast to the U.S., over the last decade the U.K. saw a larger decline in mortality amenable to health care than the other countries studied, the report reads.

Though the U.S. did rank fifth in care process, which includesprevention, safe care, coordinationand patient engagement, its overall score was easily the worst of the 11 nations.

The U.S. ranks last in health care among the 11 nations evaluated by the Commonwealth Fund. Commonwealth Fund

Particularly distressing when considering the last-place ranking is how much more America spends on health care relative to other nations.

The U.S. leads in health care spending. Commonwealth Fund

The U.S. health care system was the lowest performing. Commonwealth Fund

The U.S. is the only high-income nation to lack universal health care. As the report notes, this has effects that go beyond just access issues. Administrative efficiency, for example, lags because of the time wasted sorting out billing and insurance claims.

Though there is plenty of room for the U.S. to improve, the Commonwealth Fund concludes that for the countrys health care system to compete with those of other high-income nations, a drastic change in course may be necessary.

To gain more than incremental improvement,..the U.S. may need to pursue different approaches to organizing and financing the delivery system,the report reads. These could include strengthening primary care, supporting organizations that excel at care coordination and moving away from fee-for-service payment to other types of purchasing that create incentives to better coordinate care. These steps should ensure early diagnosis and treatment, improve the affordability of care, and ultimately improve the health of all Americans.

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How Bad Is US Health Care? Among High-Income Nations, It's the Worst, Study says - Newsweek

Some consistency in all the GOP health-care plans – Washington Post

We have watched one Republican health-care plan after another the original House plan, the Meadows-MacArthur amended plan, the original Senate plan and now the Cruz-amended plan. There are some constants:

As to the last:

The July Kaiser Health Tracking Poll finds that most Americans (61 percent) continue to hold unfavorable views of the plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA), including over four in ten (44 percent) who say they have very unfavorable view. The share of the public with negative views of the law has increased slightly in the past month, from 55 percent to 61 percent. Views of the Republican plan to repeal and replace the ACA continue to vary widely by party and a large intensity gap remains, with Democrats being nearly three times as likely to hold a very unfavorable view as Republicans are to hold a very favorable view (71 percent versus 25 percent, respectively).

Nearly two-thirds of the public opposes (65 percent) major reductions in federal funding for Medicaid as part of a plan to repeal and replace the ACA, and most continue to oppose these reductions even after hearing arguments in support of them. About half of Republicans and those who approve of President Trump support major reductions in federal funding for Medicaid. . . .As seen in previous months, more of the public views the ACA favorably than the plan to replace the 2010 health care law (50 percent compared to 28 percent).

Voters are telling Congress and the White House what they want. The majority of the public (71 percent) would rather see Republicans in Congress work with Democrats to make improvements to the ACA but not repeal the law, compared to one-fourth (23 percent) who say they would rather Republicans continue working on their own plan to repeal and replace the ACA. Although a majority of self-identified Republicans do not want bipartisan health care, Trump supporters are divided with similar shares saying Republicans in Congress should continue working on their own plan (47 percent) as saying they want them to work with Democrats on improving the ACA (46 percent).

In short, the longer the GOP debates health care, the less appealing its plan becomes. In this regard, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) had it initially right set a quick deadline and take a vote so the GOP can move on to other things. Leaving the plan out there does not help its chances. Alas, McConnell caved to right-wing and White House pressure and now will keep working on health care through mid-August. The danger here is threefold: More debate will intensify opposition; the GOP will be less prepared to shift gears to deal with issues like the budget and debt limit in September; and the rest of the GOPs legislative agenda will become less and less viable. On this one, McConnell should have stuck to his original game plan.

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Some consistency in all the GOP health-care plans - Washington Post